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+18 +1
Iron Sky 2 - Trailer (2016)
Twenty years after the events of Iron Sky, the former Nazi Moonbase has become the last refuge of mankind. Earth was devastated by a nuclear war, but buried deep under the wasteland lies a power that could save the last of humanity – or destroy it once and for all. The truth behind the creation of mankind will be revealed when an old enemy leads our heroes on an adventure into the Hollow Earth.
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+23 +1
Was Roswell UFO Crash A Secret Nazi Aircraft?
The Roswell, New Mexico, UFO crash of 1947 was the result of - here it comes, wait for it - top secret Nazi technology. No alien spacecraft, no alien bodies, but an aircraft called the "Bell" (depicted above from a 2008 Discovery Channel documentary).
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0 +1
How the world loved the swastika - until Hitler stole it
In the Western world the swastika is synonymous with fascism, but it goes back thousands of years and has been used as a symbol of good fortune in almost every culture in the world. As more evidence emerges of its long pre-Nazi history in Europe, can this ancient sign ever shake off its evil associations?
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+15 +1
‘Miss Hitler' contest cancelled after Russian social media site takes down pro-Nazi page
A" Miss Hitler" online pageant was cancelled Monday when a Russian social media site took down the pro-Nazi page hosting the competition, Vocativ reported.
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+20 +1
On the Trail of Nazi Counterfeiters
On Thursday, the CIA declassified hundreds of files from its in-house journal, Studies in Intelligence, after a successful Freedom of Information Act request from a former employee, resulting in a bonanza of fascinating and downright weird tales from the history of the CIA from the 1970s through the 2000s. Among the hundreds of files, available here, we found this intriguing tale of Nazi plans to destabilize the American and British economies in the final days of the Third Reich.
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+21 +1
Monet discovered in suitcase of 'Nazi art' hoarder
The reclusive son of a Nazi-era art dealer who amassed a giant secret collection snuck a Monet with him into the German hospital where he died in May, investigators said Friday. The executor of Cornelius Gurlitt's estate discovered the French Impressionist artwork in a suitcase handed over to him by the clinic this week.
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+20 +1
Monument Seeks to End Silence on Killings of the Disabled by the Nazis
The first to be singled out for systematic murder by the Nazis were the mentally ill and intellectually disabled. By the end of World War II, an estimated 300,000 of them had been gassed or starved, their fates hidden by phony death certificates and then largely overlooked among the many atrocities that were to be perpetrated in Nazi Germany in the years to follow.
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+37 +1
Orwell's review of Mein Kampf
From March, 1940, a fascinating look at the development of Hitler's reputation in Germany and the UK, and the way that his publishers were forced to change the way they marketed his book.
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+12 +1
This Never-Before-Seen WWII Document Offers An Inside Account Of An Elite Nazi Combat Unit's Collapse
American G.I. John Frankemolle was guarding a group of captured German soldiers in Europe during World War II when an intelligence officer handed him an interrogation of prisoner of war (IPW) report. The officer told Frankemolle to keep the papers to himself and give it back to him after reading it — but that was the last time the two ever saw each other.
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+5 +1
Swastika banner flies over Coney Island; beach-goers complain
A small plane carrying a banner of a swastika, flew above Coney Island beaches over the weekend as part of an annual effort by the International Raelian Movement to resurrect it as a symbol for good instead of its hated representation of Nazi racism and fascism.
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+20 +1
Nazi 'perfect Aryan' poster child was Jewish
When Hessy Taft was six months old, she was a poster child for the Nazis. Her photograph was chosen as the image of the ideal Aryan baby, and distributed in party propaganda. But what the Nazis didn’t know was that their perfect baby was really Jewish.
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+17 +1
Posters of Hitler and Swastika T-shirts Are All the Rage in Indonesia
The swastika is everywhere—on walls, cups, ashtrays, and T-shirts—and it's not the Buddhist kind. The strangest thing about this phenomenon, however, is that the people selling and sporting the Nazi paraphernalia often aren't confused, right-wing extremists like these guys but average locals who often have no idea who Hitler was.
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+14 +1
Here's Why Some Nazis Enjoyed Their Freedom In The US After World War II
The major reason why some suspected Nazis were allowed to enter the U.S. and escape prosecution is a source of embarrassment for the federal government.
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+13 +1
Why Did the Nazis Hijack the Swastika?
Reader Scott from Vermont wrote to ask, “Why did the Nazis adopt the ancient sacred symbol of the swastika as their emblem?” Before the Nazis started using it and ruined it for everyone, the swastika had a long history throughout the world. Archaeologists have found evidence of the symbol’s use everywhere from Europe to Africa to Asia, going back thousands and thousands of years to the Iron and Bronze Ages.
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+20 +1
Germany accuses 89-year-old Pennsylvania man being Nazi death camp guard
Germany is seeking extradition of an 89-year-old Pennsylvania man in connection with the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Jewish men, women and children at the Auschwitz and Buchenwald Nazi concentration camps, a U.S. judge said on Wednesday.
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+4 +1
Fascism Is Fashionable Again in Europe
Reactionary conservative candidates did alarmingly well in recent elections for the European Parliament. Is this a passing phase or a portent of something more serious?
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+18 +1
SS songs and antisemitism: the week Golden Dawn turned openly Nazi
Supporters of the far-right party gave Hitler salutes and sang the Horst Wessel song outside parliament last week. Helena Smith reports from Athens on how Golden Dawn has taken on a sinister new tone
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+15 +1
Putin Demands Apology After Prince Charles Compares Him To Hitler
A senior Russian ambassador is to meet an official from the Foreign Office on Thursday after the Prince of Wales caused a diplomatic row by comparing Vladimir Putin to Adolf Hitler.
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+19 +1
Nazi-Era Snapshots and the Banality of Evil
“Do you know about the Lakota Indians?” asked Daniel Lenchner, handing me a slightly faded photograph from the early 20th century. It was a class portrait with a location printed at the bottom: Lakota, North Dakota. “Now,” challenged Lenchner, “can you find an Indian in this picture?” I scanned the rows of Caucasian faces.
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